At the university, where I worked, they switched to potassium chloride for the sidewalks. They used regular road salt in the past, but it would kill the grass along the sidewalks about a foot out. The potassium chloride didn't do this. If we had a lot of snow and ice during the winter they would start out with sand and potassium chloride mix. When that ran out they would switch to a ground limestone mix. If it really got bad the were forced to use the cinders from the heating plant. That really made a big mess.
Used to be that the road crews only put enough salt in their sand piles to keep them from freezing. I see now a lot of salt gets dumped on the rods without any type of grit added.
How about we go back to using tire chains? I remember Dad putting them on after the first snow, and taking them off in the spring.
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Today's Featured Article - The Ferguson System Principal An implement cutting through the soil at a certain depth say eight inches requires a certain force or draft to pull it. Obviously that draft will increase if the implement runs deeper than eight inches, and decrease if it runs shallower. Why not use that draft fact to control the depth of work automatically? The draft forces are
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